Darren & Brose
Darren & Brose are Darren Chau[1] and Brose Avard, two Australian based comedy writers and performers who first met while studying media at Latrobe University. Chau had been working with the comedy ensemble Chop-Socky,[2][3][4][5] while Avard had been producing and broadcasting on several Melbourne radio stations.[6][7] They co-founded the Latrobe Media Group and produced comedy shows for the Melbourne Fringe Festival, Melbourne International Comedy Festival and Channel 31.[8][9][10]
Television programs
Their first television project together was the comedy variety program, The Rumpus Room with Darren and Brose,[11] which featured sketches, music video parodies, animations animations and special guests[12][13][14] including Kerry Armstrong, Wil Anderson, Dave Hughes, John Safran, Lawrence Mooney, Dave O'Neil, Jo Stanley, Adam Richard, Damian Callinan, Andrew Gaze and Santo Cilauro. The show concluded after five seasons with an outside broadcast at the Athenaeum theatre as part of the Melbourne International Comedy Festival.[15][16]
Chau and Avard were then commissioned by Channel 31 to produce the station's first live nightly program. The nightly one-hour live show Darren and Brose[16][17][18] featured special guest interviews, sketches and animations plus regular weekly guests, including Jeff Jenkins, Billy Pinnell, Paul McCarthy, Tony Wilson (Radio Presenter), Amy Parks and Melbourne rock band Man Bites God.[19] The final episode was also their 100th episode in total and featured special guests Bert Newton, Tony Martin, Glenn Ridge, Gavin Wood, Stan Zemanek and State Minister Justin Madden.[20][21]
They returned with the weekly formatted Saturday Night Darren and Brose.[22][23][24][25] Special guests included Glenn Robbins, Ian Smith, Suzie Wilks[26] and Tracy Bartram, along with American comedians Kenny Kramer and Todd Barry. When the series ended it was the highest rating programme on Channel 31.[27][28]
In 2011 the pair re-united to work on Toon Time,[29][30][31] which Darren Chau created, co-wrote and executive produced, with Brose Avard writing and producing. The programme was hosted by Penelope Mitchell and Dickie Knee, became the highest rating local production ever on channel 111 Hits, and its promotional campaign won 5 Gold Promax Awards.[32][32]
The 'Lost Tapes'
Thought not to have been in existence, a box of digital tapes were found with recordings of Darren & Brose's live to air TV shows, including Channel 31's very first ever live, daily show. On May 23, 2013 these tapes began being released weekly on-line via the Darren & Brose web-site and YouTube serving as a time-capsule snapshot of the era, the various faces that appeared as guests and the early work of many people who were trained on these shows and have gone on to have successful careers in the industry.[33][34]
Brose's solo work
Brose Avard has acted in numerous television shows including Prank Patrol, Lowdown[35] and Kath & Kim.[36][37][38]
He is also a television warm-up performer having worked for every Australian network on shows including Santo, Sam and Ed's Sports Fever!, The Project, The Circle, The Chat Room, Millionaire Hot Seat, Letters and Numbers,[39] The Einstein Factor and Shaun Micallef's Mad as Hell.
Darren's solo work
Darren Chau was a founding member of the comedy ensemble Chop-Socky, who wrote, performed and produced for ABC's Recovery, 3RRR FM, the Melbourne International Comedy Festival and a scripted comedy produced by Artist Services for Foxtel, which he wrote, acted in and directed.[2][12][13][40][41] He has written and produced hundreds of hours of television and created over a dozen shows including Jimeoin: Over the Top,[42] The Chaser's War On Everything – Red Button Edition and A Night at the Festival Club [43] which evolved into ABC's Comedy Up Late.
He was a segment producer, and head writer for ABC's The Einstein Factor, before accepting the role at Foxtel as Group Programming Director for The Comedy Channel and 111 Hits,[44] the latter being a brand new entertainment channel he co-created and launched.[45] The channel launched on Saturday, 1 November 2008 with a special he conceived named Countdown to 111 Hits that featured Molly Meldrum, Jenna Elfman, Ian Thorpe, Bonnie Tyler, John Paul Young, The Angels and Jermaine Jackson.[46] The channel was rebranded 111 Greats in 2014. At Foxtel he launched dozens of overseas shows to Australian audiences including Late Night with Jimmy Fallon, Louie, Tosh.0, Russell Howard's Good News and Adult Swim titles including Robot Chicken. He also returned past shows to Australian screens including Prisoner, and in 2013 Foxtel's Brian Walsh publicly thanked and credited Darren Chau for inspiring the idea to create Wentworth, Foxtel's highest rating non-sports program of all time [47] and winner of the Astra Award for Most Outstanding Drama.[48] He created, developed and executive produced 30 local productions including Balls of Steel Australia which became The Comedy Channel's highest ever rating series [49] and won the Astra Award for Most Outstanding Light Entertainment Programme.[50] Chau led both the Comedy Channel and 111 Hits to record ratings years, also winning fourteen Promax Awards,[32][51] including the World Gold for best entertainment program campaign,[52] and the national television Captioning Award.[53][54]
He created and produced the development initiative and reality TV format Comedy Gold [55] which ran for two years, discovering talent such as Troy Kinne [56] and uncovering programme concepts from talent including Jason Gann, Stephen Kearney (Friends, Los Trios Ringbarkus, Garbo (film)), Marty Fields and The Agony of Life series by Adam Zwar,[57][58][59] as well as executive producing the eventual competition winner starring Colin Lane, Toby Truslove, Kitty Flanagan and Patrick Brammall.[60][61][62][63]
He has been a regular guest speaker at the SPAA Conference,[64][65] is an official judge of the International Emmy Awards [66] and was appointed by the International Academy of Television Arts & Sciences as the expert moderator for the Comedy Nominee Panel session at the Emmy's World Television Festival in New York.[67][68]
Awards
Along with Radio Karate (Ryan Shelton and Hamish & Andy), Darren & Brose were nominated as finalists for numerous awards including Program of the Year, Best Variety Program, Best Comedy, Best Producer, and Best Presenter at the inaugural Antenna Awards.[69]
The pair beat out thousands of submissions from around Australia to be selected as finalists for Network Ten's ELEVEN OUT OF TEN Development Initiative as part of the 2010 SPAA Conference.[70][71]
Latrobe Media Group
Darren & Brose co-founded the Latrobe Media Group which discovered and trained dozens of future international media talent.[72] The alumni includes German based journalist and presenter Stefanie Suren,[73][74] TV news reporter Amy Parks,[75] senior journalist and news presenter Natalie Schenken,[76][77][78][79] Abu Dhabi based Journalist Saeed Saeed,[80][81] German based radio presenter Susanne Henn,[82] radio news presenter Miriam Maghrabi,[83][84] actress and comedian Hayley Butcher,[85][86][87] Neighbours writer Shaun Topp, television Editor Rob Buttery,[88] television director Richard Franc and television producers Andrea Williams,[89][90] Chris Thompson and Adrian Beck.
References
- ↑ Screen Producers Association of Australia
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Australian Television Information Archive
- ↑ Farrant, Darrin (1998). "Radio Waves – Chop-Socky Drive". The Age (Melbourne).
- ↑ Hurley, Amanda (1998). "A wannabee weekly comedy act goes to air". City Weekly (Melbourne).
- ↑ "Chop-Socky". Melbourne International Comedy Festival Magazine (Melbourne). 1999.
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missing|last1=
in Authors list (help) - ↑ Farrant, Darrin (1998). "Radio Waves – The Urban Show". The Age (Melbourne).
- ↑
- ↑ Miller, K (December 2002). "Talent scout". The Age (Melbourne).
- ↑ "Latrobe's inhouse comics take the big stage". Agora (Melbourne): 43. 2004.
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missing|last1=
in Authors list (help) - ↑
- ↑ "Rumpus Room". Inpress (Melbourne). March 2002.
- ↑ 12.0 12.1 "From TV to stage". The Leader (Melbourne). September 1999.
- ↑ 13.0 13.1 "Pair loves monkey business". The Leader (Melbourne). March 2000.
- ↑ "Students make room for life's big questions". The Leader (Melbourne). March 2000.
- ↑ "What's the Rumpus?". Beat Magazine (Melbourne). April 2000.
- ↑ 16.0 16.1 Australian TV Archive
- ↑ Brookfield, Joanne (September 2002). "Funny Business". Beat Magazine (Melbourne).
- ↑
- ↑
- ↑ Burke, Cameron (March 2004). "Darren and Brose". Inpress (Melbourne).
- ↑ tv.com
- ↑ Bouma, Monique (March 2004). "Reviving the good old days". Manningham Leader (Melbourne). p. 28.
- ↑ "Old Fashioned TV". Leader Newspaper (Melbourne). April 2004.
- ↑
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- ↑ Ubaldi, Simone (March 2004). "Darren and Brose". Beat Magazine (Melbourne).
- ↑ Australian TV Archive
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- ↑ 32.0 32.1 32.2 http://www.promaxanz.tv/sites/promaxanz.tantab.com/files/banners/anz11-winnerslist.pdf
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- ↑ http://www.tvtonight.com.au/2013/05/record-ratings-for-wentworth.html
- ↑ http://www.tvtonight.com.au/2014/03/2014-astra-awards-winners.html
- ↑ http://www.tvtonight.com.au/2011/04/balls-of-steel-australia-tops-comedy-channel.html
- ↑ http://www.tvtonight.com.au/2012/06/fox-sports-cloudstreet-selling-houses-australia-top-2012-astra-awards.html
- ↑ http://www.promaxanz.tv/sites/promaxanz.tantab.com/files/banners/anz12-winners-list.pdf
- ↑ http://www.intersections.tv/2011/2011-PromaxBDA-PromoMktg-World-Gold-Winners.pdf
- ↑ http://www.mediaaccess.org.au/node/230
- ↑ http://www.ai-media.tv/news/2010_Captioning_Awards_Night
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- ↑ Screen Producers Association of Australia
- ↑ http://conference.spaa.org.au/displaycommon.cfm?an=1&subarticlenbr=80
- ↑ Emmy Jurors
- ↑ http://www.iemmys.tv/files/2010%20Festival%20Program.pdf
- ↑ Emmys Festival Program
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- ↑ Eleven out of Ten
- ↑ Ellis, Heather (March 2002). "UniTV show fades to black". The Leader (Melbourne). p. 28.
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- ↑ de:Stefanie Suren
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- ↑ "Kicking up a Rumpus makes job sense". The Leader (Melbourne). March 2002. p. 28.
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- ↑ Jones, Kate (March 2002). "Rumpus crew romps in". Preston Leader (Melbourne).
- ↑ "Students head for Rumpus Room fun". Preston Leader (Melbourne). March 2002. p. 28.
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